In 1813 Dufrénoy was admitted to the École des Mines, at that time located at Peisey in Tarentaise (Savoy), and he returned with it when the school was moved to Paris in 1816.
Career
Gallery of Pierre-Armand Dufrénoy
Rhodonite is a mineral which was described by Dufrénoy.
Gallery of Pierre-Armand Dufrénoy
Hureaulite is a mineral which was described by Dufrénoy.
Gallery of Pierre-Armand Dufrénoy
Halloysite is a mineral which was described by Dufrénoy.
Gallery of Pierre-Armand Dufrénoy
Phosphohedyphane is a mineral which was described by Dufrénoy.
Achievements
In 1845 the mineral dufrenoysite was named after Dufrénoy.
Membership
French Academy of Sciences
1840
Dufrénoy was admitted to membership in the French Academy of Sciences in 1840.
Awards
Order of the Legion of Honour
Dufrénoy was named the Commander of the Legion of Honour.
Wollaston Medal
In 1843 the Geological Society of London presented the Wollaston Medal to Dufrénoy and Élie de Beaumont jointly for their work.
In 1813 Dufrénoy was admitted to the École des Mines, at that time located at Peisey in Tarentaise (Savoy), and he returned with it when the school was moved to Paris in 1816.
Pierre-Armand Dufrénoy was a French geologist and mineralogist. With Élie de Beaumont and under the direction of Brochant de Villiers, he prepared the first modem geological map of France.
Background
Pierre-Armand Dufrénoy was born on September 5, 1792, in Sevran, Seine-et-Oise, France. His father, Simon, was Voltaire’s literary agent, and his mother, Adélaïde, was a scholar of the classics and an accomplished poet. Thus the boy grew up in an intellectual atmosphere despite the family’s extreme poverty, occasioned by the French Revolution and the father’s loss of eyesight.
Education
Dufrénoy first attended the lycée at Rouen and then the Lycée Louis-le-Grand in Paris. He won the first prize in mathematics at the general examinations in 1810 and entered the École Polytechnique in 1811. In 1813 he was admitted to the École des Mines, at that time located at Peisey in Tarentaise (Savoy), and he returned with it when the school was moved to Paris in 1816.
In 1818 Dufrénoy was named engineer of mines and head of the collections at the École des Mines. Stimulated by the publication of Greenough’s geological map of England, Brochant de Villiers was successful in gaining authorization for the preparation of a similar map of France. He and Élie de Beaumont were selected to carry out the necessary fieldwork and in 1822 were sent to England for two years to learn Greenough’s procedures. As a result of this visit, Dufrénoy and Élie de Beaumont coauthored a work entitled Voyage métallurgique en Angleterre, which described in detail the mining and metallurgical industries of England.
For the French geological map Dufrénoy was assigned the area south and west of a line running from Honlleur, Alençon, Avallon, Chalons-sur-Saône, and the Rhone. Each summer from 1825 to 1829 he and Élie de Beaumont made field trips, surveying and taking notes on their respective areas; from 1830 to 1834 they traveled together in order to resolve difficulties and coordinate their work. They published their notes between 1830 and 1838 and the explanation of their map in 1841. The map was on a scale of 1:500,000, and the explanation was essentially a physical description of France, together with the history, composition, and disposition of its terrain. They did not perform any detailed stratigraphic work. The regions of the Pyrenees and Britanny had hardly been explored geologically at that time, and Dufrénoy’s work in these areas was excellent.
While preparing the geological map, Dufrénoy was also engaged in other important studies. In 1830 he determined that the large coal deposits in the depart-ment of Aveyron could be used directly in various metallurgical processes, as the English had been doing; his study resulted in the establishment of industries at Decazeville. In 1832 he was sent to Scotland to study the use of high-temperature air in iron blast furnaces, and his detailed report caused the French iron industry to adopt this practice immediately. He also studied the thermal springs at Vichy and drew up plans for their exploitation.
Dufrénoy served as assistant professor of mineralogy at the École des Mines from 1827 to 1835 and as professor from 1835 to 1848. In 1836 he became inspector of courses there and director of the school in 1846, so that, in effect, he governed instruction in the institution for twenty years, until his death in 1857. During his tenure Dufrénoy introduced to courses the use of specimens from the rich mineralogical collection, and he modernized the curriculum by adding courses in railway construction, law, economics, and paleontology. He entered the Conseil des Mines in 1846 and was promoted to the superior grade in 1851. After Brongniart’s death in 1847, Dufrénoy was named professor of mineralogy at the Muséum d’Histoire Naturelle.
Armand Dufrénoy is best known as the co-author of the first geological map of France and the author of a report on the iron mines of the Pyrenees. He published over sixty memoirs on geology and crystallographic and chemical mineralogy and an important mineralogical work entitled Traité de minéralogie. As the inspector of courses and later director of the École des Mines, he instituted important changes in the curriculum and teaching methods.
Dufrénoy described several minerals, including halloysite, rhodonite, chalybite, mixture of siderite and carbonaceous clays, hureaulite, and phosphohedyphane.
In 1843 the Geological Society of London presented the Wollaston Medal to Dufrénoy and Élie de Beaumont jointly for their work. He was also named the Commander of the Legion of Honour.
In 1845 the newly discovered mineral dufrenoysite was named after him. There is also a street in Paris named in his honor.
The Legion of Honour is the highest French order of merit for military and civil merits, established in 1802 by Napoleon Bonaparte and retained by all later French governments and régimes.
The Legion of Honour is the highest French order of merit for military and civil merits, established in 1802 by Napoleon Bonaparte and retained by all later French governments and régimes.